Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Interpretation of climate change using maps of climate analogues in the DRIAS climate services project Julien Lémond 1-2, S. Planton 1, M. Ha-Duong 3,

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Interpretation of climate change using maps of climate analogues in the DRIAS climate services project Julien Lémond 1-2, S. Planton 1, M. Ha-Duong 3,"— Presentation transcript:

1 Interpretation of climate change using maps of climate analogues in the DRIAS climate services project Julien Lémond 1-2, S. Planton 1, M. Ha-Duong 3, Ph. Dandin 2 1 CNRM-GAME, Météo-France, CNRS, Toulouse, France 2 Direction of Climatology, Météo-France, Toulouse, France 3 CIRED, Paris, France 11th EMS / 10th ECAM Berlin, 13 September 2011

2  Global warming is unequivocal (IPCC, 2007) –Need for adaptation and mitigation  Why an approach by analogy? –Analogy is an efficient way to communicate on complex issues –Results could be used by people with a no scientific background  Climate analogues consist in seaching in the current climate, regions with similar climate than expected in the future for a considered city (c.f. Hallegate et al.,2007; Kopf et al. 2008)  Why a study on climate around urban areas? –Most of the european populations live in a city –Strong impact of an increase of temperature in these areas (e.g. heat wave in 2003 or 2006)  This study is lead in frame of the project DRIAS, which aims at facilitating the access to climate scenarios information Context – Rationale

3 Presentation Outline  1°) Context - Rationale  2°) Data and Method  3°) Main Results  4°) Conclusion

4 Data: RCMs from ENSEMBLES project  Main issues: –Taking uncertainties into account: need of several climate models –Necessity of high spatial resolution: need of regional climate models The climate projections used in this study have been produced for the European project ENSEMBLES InstitutionRCMDriving GCMRCM References C4lRCAHadCM3Q16Kjellström et al. (2005) CNRMALADINARPEGE_RM5.1Radu et al. (2008) DMIHIRHAMECHAM5-r3Christensen et al. (1996) DMIHIRHAMARPEGEChristensen et al. (1996) ETHZCLMHadCM3Q0Böhm et al. (2006) ICTPRegCMECHAM5-r3Giorgi and Mearns (1999) KNMIRACMOECHAM5-r3Lenderik et al. (2003) MPIREMOECHAM5-r3Jacob (2001) SHMIRCAECHAM5-r3Kjellström et al. (2005) Regional Climate Model and Driving General Climate Model used in the study:

5  Parameters used: –Surface temperature –Total Precipitation  Resolutions: –Spatial: 25 km –Temporal: daily  Time periods defined: –Reference: 1960-1990 –Near projection: 2031-2060 –Middle projection: 2051-2080 –Far projection: 2071-2100  Seasons defined: –Summer: June-July-August (JJA) –Winter: December-January-Febuary (DJF) Parameters, resolutions and time periods

6  Spatial interpolation (bicubic interpolation)  Ocean-Land mask  Quantile-Quantile correction (Déqué, 2007) Pre-processing Black line: raw output model PDF Dashed black line: observations E-OBS PDF Red line: corrected model PDF Example of correction for summer temperature, for a grid-point (data from CNRM model) Observations used are from the ENSEMBLES daily gridded observational dataset (called E-OBS; V3; Haylock et al., 2008) temperature density

7 The 2-Dimensional Kolmogorov-Smirnov test (Peacock, 1983; Kopf et al., 2008) A Statistical method used to computed analogues Illustration of the 2D KS-test for climatic samples (From Kopf et al., 2008) 1)Selection of future projections of seasonal temperature and precipitation of the closest grid- point for the studied city (e.g. Paris) 2)Statistical measure of climatic similarity with reference climate, for all the grid-point of the European domain studied

8 Presentation Outline  1°) Context - Rationale  2°) Data and Method  3°) Main Results  4°) Conclusion

9 Inter-model spread (1/2) Shade key: 1 -> Bad analogues 0 -> Good analogues  Results for : –Paris, Winter (DJF), Near Projection (2031- 2060) –9 models and multimodels ensemble

10 Inter-model spread (2/2) Shade key: 1 -> Bad analogues 0 -> Good analogues  Results for : –Paris, Summer (JJA), Near Projection (2031-2060) –9 models and multimodels ensemble

11 Climate analogues for Paris from multi-models ensemble WinterSummer 1961-1990 2031-2060 2051-2080 2071-2100 Shade key: 1 -> Bad analogues 0 -> Good analogues

12 WinterSummer Shade key: 1 -> Bad analogues 0 -> Good analogues Climate analogues for Berlin from multi-models ensemble 1961-1990 2031-2060 2051-2080 2071-2100

13 trajectories of the best analogues Paris Berlin LondonMadrid Best analogues for time periods: H1: 2031-2050 H2: 2051-2080 H3: 2071-2100 Blue: Winter (DJF) Red: Summer (JJA)

14 Conclusion  This study’s aims has been to develop, in frame of the project DRIAS, a climate product easily useable by people involved in impact and adaptation issues  Following Hallegate et al. (2007) and Kopf et al. (2008), analogue approach has been used. That consist in seaching in the current climate, regions with similar climate than expected in the future for a considered city  Maps of climate analogues and trajectories of best analogues have been computed using a 2D KS test and a multi-models ensemble (9 RCMs from the EMSEMBLES project)  A seasonal study has been done on corrected data  More sophistical definition of best analogue could be explored

15


Download ppt "Interpretation of climate change using maps of climate analogues in the DRIAS climate services project Julien Lémond 1-2, S. Planton 1, M. Ha-Duong 3,"

Similar presentations


Ads by Google